Monday, October 27, 2014

It Was Not A Civil War


It was a civil war when Illinois' Governor Yates reported an "insurrection in Edgar County; Union men on one side, Copperheads on the other, they have had two battles." 

It was a civil war for the Union Army when the 109th Illinois had to be disbanded because its men were Southern sympathizers. Tens of thousands more deserted when the Emancipation Proclamation was announced. 

It was a civil war in Indiana when thousands of draft resisters hid in enclaves. From the governor: "Matters assume grave import, two hundred mounted armed men in Rush county have today resisted arrest as deserters . . . southern Indiana is ripe for revolution."

It was a Civil War when Williamson County Illinois seceded from the State of Illinois and was forced back in at the point of a bayonet; but that didn’t stop many of its men for attaching themselves to the 15th Tennessee Infantry in order to fight for the Confederate States of America…

It was a civil war in New York City when a draft protest turned into a rampaging mob of 70,000. That civil war lasted four days because all the available troops were at Gettysburg, fighting soldiers from another land. It was a civil war when they returned and fired into this New York crowd, killing nearly 2,000 of their own divided "community."

Civil war implies on faction attempting to take control of the government from another. The South no more wanted to take control of the government in Washington than our founders wanted to take control of the government in London England during the Revolution. 

Southern Nationalist



Learn The Truth

Southern By Birth, Union By Force

Who Should Govern The South?

Free Dixie!

Stop White Genocide!

Confederate American

We Can't Fill Their Shoes, But We Can Walk In Their Footsteps

Friday, October 24, 2014

Old Abe Lincoln


Lincoln was a racist who was also guilty of war crimes and is responsible for the deaths of over 600,000 Americans.

In 1858, during a debate with Stephen Douglas, Abraham Lincoln said: “I am not, nor ever have been, in favor of bringing about in any way the social and political equality of the white and black races, that I am not nor ever have been in favor of making voters or jurors of negroes, nor of qualifying them to hold office, nor to intermarry with white people….” (Google Lincoln-Douglas debates.)

It is commonly taught that the War Between the States was about the abolition of slavery. Actually, the impetus for the war was due to a tariff placed on imported goods coming through Southern sea ports by a Northern dominated Congress. This tariff was referred to by Southerners as the Tariff of Abominations and nearly caused South Carolina to secede from the Union. Andrew Jackson threatened to send federal troops to Charleston if South Carolina refused to collect the tariff and send it to Washington. (See “Kearney’s March” by Winston Groom.)

This tariff was used to build roads and bridges in the northern states while the south was left to fend for itself.

Senator William Grayson of Virginia expressed concern that the South would eventually become the “milch cow” of the Union.

When the southern states threatened secession, Lincoln was asked why he didn’t just let the South go. He said: ”Let the South go? Let the South go! Where then shall we get our revenues?”(See “Memoirs of Service Afloat” by Raphael Semmes.)

Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation excluded slave states that remained in or aligned with the Union and certain parishes in Louisiana that were under control of Union troops. It only applied to states in the Confederacy, which was a sovereign nation, over which Lincoln had no legal authority.

Therefore, his proclamation did not free slaves anywhere.

All slaves were eventually freed by passage of the Thirteenth Amendment on December 6th, 1865.




Some of the many atrocities committed by Lincoln’s Union Army are as follows:

1. Lincoln ordered General Sherman to “make Georgia howl.” So Sherman marched through Georgia burning not only towns, villages, factories and grist mills, but also burning crops, leaving women, children, and the elderly to starve. Sherman captured more than two thousand white women and children who were sent to the North to work at sustenance level pay, making them virtual slaves for the Yankees. They were never returned to their
families.

2. Union Colonel John B. Turchin was court-martialed for letting his troops “plunder and pillage the inhabitants” of Athens, Alabama, and allowing several of his soldiers to commit rape on the person of a colored girl. After convicted, Turchin was promoted to the rank of Brigadier General by Abraham Lincoln and continued to serve in the Union Army until Oct 4, 1864.

3. In Marion County Missouri, Gen. John McNeil threw southern sympathizers in jail for expressing a pro-Southern point of view. When a Union informer came up missing, McNeil threatened to kill ten of these men if the informer did not show up. When the informer did not show up, these men were summarily executed. Shortly afterwards, McNeil was promoted to Brigadier General by Lincoln.

4. In 1862, several tribes of Native Americans revolted against the cruel policies of the United States government. This caused Minnesotans to fear for their safety. General John Pope rounded up 300 warriors, out of which Lincoln selected thirty-nine to execute. These Native Americans executed, simply to assuage the fears of white Minnesotans so they would vote for the re-election of Lincoln, which they did. (For details of the above and other atrocities, see, “The South was Right” by James and Walter Kennedy.)

By invading The Confederate States of America, a sovereign nation, Lincoln caused the death of more than 600,000 Americans, not to end slavery but out of pure greed and to retain control of power.

The Beginning Is Near!

Open Your Eyes And Mind

Live One Day At A Time

I Am PC

God Bless Louisiana

We Must Forever Remember Those Who Have Fallen!!!!


Remember me when I am gone away, 
Gone far away into the silent land; 

When you can no more hold me by the hand, 
Nor I half turn to go yet turning stay.

Remember me when no more day by day 
You tell me of our future that you planned:  
Only remember me; you understand 
It will be late to counsel then or pray. 

Yet if you should forget me for a while 
And afterwards remember, do not grieve: 

For if the darkness and corruption leave 
A vestige of the thoughts that once I had, 
Better by far you should forget and smile 
Than that you should remember and be sad. 

Deo Vindice!!!

The CSA Was Created For An Honorable, Noble Purpose

One Straight And Narrow Way Into Heaven


Because strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it. - Matthew 7.14

Slavery In The South


You can see by the picture that President Davis's slaves each had their own homes that they could care for during their leisure time. 

Each slaveholder was different, so there were variations from slaveholder to slaveholder, but these are typical living conditions of slaves throughout the south. The stories of the cruel slavemaster was the exception, not the rule. 

According to Ms. Teresa Roane, Archivist for United Daughters of the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis had a judicial system on his plantation. If one of the servants committed an offense, a judge and jury were made of up his peers. This is just one more fact that has been hidden from you. You see? You've been lied to....

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

What We Need


This was a political party founded to represent the needs and best interest of the people of the south. It was founded August 8, 1999 and dissolved June 5, 2003. 
It is very unfortunate that the Southern Party could not endure. The South needs an influential advocate in national politics today. 

The Very Least That We Can Do

The Lord's Name Is A Place Of Refuge

God Provides Salvation

The Greatest Sacrifice

Baptize Me With The Holy Ghost

Consuming Fire

Light Of The World